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Thailand holds weapons plane crew for 12 more days

Georgian firm leased seized plane to Ukraine: official
Astana (AFP) Dec 14, 2009 - A plane seized in Thailand suspected of smuggling North Korean arms was owned by a Kazakh airline before being sold to a Georgian firm and then leased to a Ukrainian company, officials said Monday. Aviation officials in Kazakhstan and Georgia confirmed that the plane had changed ownership repeatedly ahead of the seizure of the plane at a Bangkok airport on Friday. "This aircraft was previously in the register of Kazakhstan and was sold to a Georgian airline by our private airline and removed from the state register of Kazakhstan on October 7, 2009," Radilbek Adimolda, the head of Kazakhstan's Civil Aviation Commission told reporters. "Until spring of this year it belonged to private Kazakh airline, East Wing. It was then bought by Kazakh airline Beibarys, which in turn in October of this year sold the plane to Georgian airline Air West Georgia". "It was found that this aircraft does indeed have Georgian registration," he added.

The head of Georgia's Transport Administration, Giorgi Bokuchava, confirmed to AFP that the aircraft in question is registered in Georgia and belongs to Air West Georgia. But he added: "The airplane was recently leased to a Ukrainian company and at the time it was in Thailand it was operated by that Ukrainian company," he said. He said no other details were immediately available. The Soviet-era Ilyushin Il-76 was seized at Bangkok's Don Mueang airport on Friday during a refuelling stop and was discovered to be carrying 30 tonnes of weapons from North Korea, in violation of UN sanctions against Pyongyang. Thai police said the crew requested permission to land for refueling in Bangkok and then lied to inspectors about their cargo, saying it was oil-drilling equipment. Four of the five crew members arrested by Thai police are citizens of Kazakhstan, a former Soviet republic bordering Russia and China. Adimolda confirmed that four crew members are Kazakh citizens and said that Kazakhstan "will carry out work to defend our citizens."



Clinton 'very pleased' with Thai seizure of NKorea arms
Washington (AFP) Dec 14, 2009 - US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Monday the United States is "very pleased" with Thailand's seizure of weapons from North Korea. The chief US diplomat said the seizure "demonstrates the importance of international solidarity behind the sanctions" adopted by the UN Security Council in June after North Korea staged an underground nuclear weapons test. "It shows that sanctions can prevent the proliferation of weapons," she said during an appearance before the media with Spain's Foreign Minister Miguel Moratinos. The Thai authorities said they discovered missiles and rocket-propelled grenades from North Korea after a Belarussian pilot and four Kazakh crew landed to refuel at Bangkok's Don Mueang airport on Friday.

It was the first known arms cargo seized under the latest UN sanctions against Pyongyang. The men were charged with possessing weapons for war and on Monday a Thai court extended their detention so that police can investigate further. "I don't think anyone should be surprised that North Korea is continuing to attempt to evade the sanctions and export around the world, because that is their principal source of foreign currency," Clinton said. "They have a need to continue to sell the one thing that they can export. But we were very pleased to see the strong action taken by the Thais," she said. "And it would not have been possible without strong action of the United Nations, and I think there's a lesson there for people around the world to see when it comes to Iran," she said.

by Staff Writers
Bangkok (AFP) Dec 15, 2009
A Thai court on Monday extended the detention of the crew of a plane that flew a cache of heavy weapons out of North Korea, as Washington hailed the seizure as proof sanctions were effective.

The 30-tonne load, including missiles and rocket-propelled grenades, was discovered after a Belarussian pilot and four Kazakh crew landed to refuel at Bangkok's domestic Don Mueang airport on Friday.

It marks the first time an airborne arms cargo is known to have been seized under the latest UN sanctions against North Korea, imposed in response to Pyongyang's nuclear activities.

The men, all middle-aged, were charged with possessing weapons for war and on Monday a court extended their detention to allow police to investigate further.

"The court approved our request to detain them for another 12 days and they will be moved to Bangkok Remand Prison while their lawyer seeks bail," said national police spokesman Pongsapat Pongcharoen.

Thai media have claimed that the authorities were tipped off about the plane by US intelligence.

In Washington, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton hailed the capture as a lesson also to Iran, against which the United States is threatening a drive for further international sanctions in relation to Tehran's nuclear activities.

Clinton said the seizure showed "the importance of international solidarity behind the sanctions" adopted by the UN Security Council in June after North Korea staged an underground nuclear weapons test.

"It shows that sanctions can prevent the proliferation of weapons.

"And it would not have been possible without strong action of the United Nations, and I think there's a lesson there for people around the world to see when it comes to Iran," Clinton said.

In Bangkok, defence lawyer Somsak Saithong said he would make a further bail application Tuesday with support from the Kazakh embassy.

Initial inspections suggested the cargo contained no nuclear weaponry, Air Vice Marshal Meatha Sangkavichitr said.

There was also no evidence of links to terrorism, according to Tawin Pleansri, secretary general of the national security council.

Pilot Mikhai Petukhou, 54, and crew members Viktor Abdullayev, 58, Vitaliy Shumkov, 54, Alexandr Zrybner and Ilyas Issakov, both 53, had told investigators they had "no idea" what they were transporting, Pongsapat said.

The plane had stopped in the United Arab Emirates and Thailand before flying to Pyongyang, government spokesman Panitan Wattanayagorn said.

After returning from the North Korean capital, it was due to stop in Sri Lanka but its end destination was not clear, he added.

The weapons came from a North Korean company and the plane was registered in ex-Soviet Georgia, Thai premier Abhisit Vejjajiva said on Sunday.

He said the crew had requested permission to land for refuelling and told inspectors their cargo was oil-drilling equipment.

In the Kazakh capital the head of the country's civil aviation commission, Radilbek Adimolda, said the plane had belonged to a Kazakh airline but was sold to a Georgian airline in October.

He vowed that Kazakhstan "will carry out work to defend our citizens".

One Western expert told AFP on condition of anonymity that it was "completely clear" this was "a matter between the Americans and the Thais".

The US State Department says North Korea is thought to earn hundreds of millions of dollars from the sale of missiles and other illicit activities.

In the summer the US navy shadowed a North Korean freighter suspected of carrying banned cargo and believed to be bound for Myanmar, before the ship turned back.

In August, weapons including rocket-propelled grenades were found on a ship seized by the United Arab Emirates while travelling from North Korea to Iran.

The latest seizure carried echoes of Thailand's arrest last year of Russian arms dealer Viktor Bout, who was allegedly doing a deal to supply missiles to Colombian rebels, a case in which the United States has been closely involved.

burs-njc/cw

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N.Korea still wants recognition as nuclear state
Seoul (AFP) Dec 14, 2009
North Korea is still seeking recognition as a nuclear power despite trying to normalise relations with the United States, South Korea's top military officer said Monday. "It is our assessment that North Korea has not altered its strategic goal of simultaneously securing the status of a nuclear state and the stability of its regime through the normalisation of North-US relations," General ... read more







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